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Pablo Neruda PABLO NERUDA The Book of Questions TRANSLATED BY WILLIAM O'DALY COPPER CANYON PRESS :PO-RT TOWNSEND ,Copyright© Pablo Neruda I974, and Heirs of Pablo Neruda Translation© I99I by William O'Daly Translations from The Book of Questions have appeared in Fine Madness, Poetry East, and The Taos Review. Publication of this book was made possible by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. Copper Canyon Press is in residence with Centrum at Fort Worden State Park. Cover monotype by Galen Garwood The type is Sabon, set by The Typeworks, Vancouver, B.C. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Neruda, Pablo, I 904- I 9 7 3· [Libro de las preguntas. English & Spanish] The book of questions I Pablo Neruda ; translated by William O'Daly. p. em. Translation and original Spanish text of : Ellibro de las preguntas. ISBN I-55659-040-7.-ISBN I-55659-04I-5 (pbk.) I. Title. PQ8097.N4L5I3 I99I 9I-72064 8 6 I-dC2o CoPPER CANYON PREss Post Office Box 2 7 I Port Townsend, Washington 98368 0 9 8 7 6 TRANSLATOR'S ACKNOWLEDGMENTS For lending his fine observations and clarifications of the original poems, I am grateful once again to Michael Constans. From the first book in the late and posthumous Neruda series to this final one, Stephanie Lutgring has helped to shape the translations. The artist Galen Garwood made available six original paintings for re­ production on the covers. I thank my friend for his exquisite im­ ages and their questions. To friends and family who have helped sustain me in this project since its inception in 197 5, I owe a debt that cannot be spoken or repaid. Any errors or inadequacies in these translations are solely the responsibility of the translator. With this sixth and final volume of my translation of Neruda's late and posthumous poetry I dedicate this body of work TO MY MOTHER AND FATHER INTRODUCTION "The only true thoughts are those which do not grasp their own meaning." AD o R N o , from Minima Moralia Pablo Neruda finished The Book of Questions (Ellibro de las preguntas) only months before his death in September 1973. With its composition, he comes full circle as a human being and an artist. The 69-year-old poet drinks from the common source of all his essential work, revisiting that "deep well of perpetuity": the imagination ofregeneration and vision. These brief poems, composed entirely of ques­ tions, express his dedication to what Hayden Carruth calls the "structure of feeling" underlying experience. Neruda explored many schools of thought, poetic styles, and voices, but his passion lay in finding and improvising upon basic rhythms of perception to reveal unspoken and unspeakable truths. From Crepusculario and Venture of the Infinite Man, two of his earliest and lesser known works, to the books that form this series of late and posthumous poetry, Neruda de­ veloped a radical trust in the quest to know himself. He also trusted the process of setting aside what he knew long enough to rediscover the secret in another cadence and through other eyes. His imagination never surrendered to familiar patterns and, especially in the later poetry, rarely sought refuge in political or artistic programs. Neruda con­ tinued to challenge himself as a human being and an artist, until he became "the astute hunter," according to Marjorie Agosin, one who by vocation seeks "the roots of belonging" wherever he finds himself. In The Book of Questions, Neruda achieves a deeper vul­ nerability and vision than in his earlier work. These poems integrate the wonder of a child with the experience of an lX adult. An adult usually grapples with a child's "irrational" questions ~olely with the resources of the rational mind. While Neruda craves the clarity rendered from an examined life, he refuses to be corralled by his rational mind. To the 316 questions that compose the 74 poems of this sequence, no rational answers exist. These questions present a reflec­ tive surface, in which only one's own face is discerned. If all rivers are sweet where does the sea get its salt? One must allow images of rivers, sea, sweetness and salt to reverberate more deeply than their literal meanings. One must be patient, instead of rushing to confront the question with a reasoning mind. Gazing into the night sky from a ship's deck or the desert floor, we glimpse the most distant stars out of the corners of our eyes. When we stare directly at them, they fade from our view. Like those stars, these questions reveal themselves more completely to a receptive mind, a mind engaged in in­ tuitive and emotional perception. Neruda composes his questions mostly of natural objects -clouds, bread, lemons, camels, friends and enemies. Those substances and forms are intertwined in our daily lives; dy­ ing and being born, their tangible limits shine outward tore­ fer to the larger world. They are mysterious because, though they are physical and "real," in themselves they cannot be decided or solved. Rather, Neruda's questions reveal new mysteries linking physical truth to metaphysical truth. Al­ lowing the questions to light the way, we arrive at pre­ viously uncharted places. These poems, however, cannot be considered "road­ maps" for the intuitive, emotional, or spiritual paths. They lead a double life: they cast nets of words into our psyches so we might gain understanding, and yet they clearly reside in the Unknown where the answers have no names. In this, Neruda's questions are close to the spirit of the koan. A koan is a question (or a question disguised as a statement) in the form of a paradox, which aids students of Zen in the X practice of zazen. An illustration of this paradox can be found in a poem by Zen master Mumon, commenting on two monks arguing with the sixth patriarch about which is actually moving-the wind, a flag, or the mind. Wind, flag, mind moves, the same understanding. When the mouth opens All are wrong. That's the way it goes: the mind becomes its own trap and the mouth its darkness. When one is rid of the hypotheses and certainties that haunt the d;Yd~~~~; ~{p;~t-;-I1df~t~~~' the~i~--£~~~ci- !~-~i~-!~~-,~~d-~~i~! ;h-~~it-i~: -o~~--t:hen - - -• -- .. ~ ~-.. -- -- _....._ - ·-, ,_, ._,,.~r,_--.• - ;;;ight come to know the value of a que~tion posed by the Sufi poet Jelaluddin Rumi in the thirteenth century: "How far is the light of the moun/ from the moon?" And why he, after receiving no answer, turned to the moon itself and asked, "Where is God?" The Anglo-Saxon root of the word "question" is kuere, which meant to ask or seek, hence to gain or win. In Latin, it was quaerere and questum; in English it became quaestor and later "quest," "inquest," and "question." Other off­ shoots of the root became "conquest," "inquire," and "ac­ quire." Neruda is interested in inquiring about the nature of things, a process initiated by asking questions rooted in ex­ perience, ~!_illg ~s_ -~~at he int~its. as trll_e an~ ~?~S _Il_()_! understand. Rather than remain in control, he submerges hi-~s~lfjn not~ knowing, in-the~~k~~~~ble qu~stions th~t ~;the imagi~-~~i~n.~~ Th~-p~er·i~--i~t:-ell!o-~--dlsti~g{ifshing between what he believes in his heart and soul (gnosis)~ and received patterns of thinking and feeling that limit imagina­ tion and growth. The Book of Questions fulfills a traditional role of all the best poetry. Its greatest gift is to assist us in teaching our­ selves how to see, partly by helping to inspire and focus the inner quest. We participate best in responding to Neruda's questions by "running in place" with the images (to borrow xi a phrase from Roshi Charlotte Joko Beck), rather than by fleeing to the rational mind. These poems are the lyrical no­ tations of the poer's imagination; they reveal their truths only when we live with them and experience them as they are. When we do this, we reawaken the imagination to the quiet possibilities of wonder and awe. In this state, we ask our own unanswerable questions. And we might come to perceive, reflected within us, the nature of the world beyond mind and sight. This unique book is a testament to everything that made Neruda an artist. He cannot be labeled a political poet or a love poet, a confessional poet or a nature poet, and only he can rightly accuse himself of being many men, of never knowing "who I am,/ nor how many I am or will be." To un­ derstand this poet's range, it is necessary to listen to him in his more vulnerable moments. These poems contain much of the purity of heart that Neruda's work is known for. Which yellow bird fills its nest with lemons? Those who have read his poems about the suffering of oth­ ers at tpe hands of political and social pathologies, will not be surprised by the lines: What forced labor does Hitler do in hell? Neruda was a complicated artist who integrated the dark with the light, and who responded to the full array of experi­ ences available to a human being. He recognized his contra­ dictions, embraced them, and eventually freed his work from the confines, the dangerous simplifications, of ideolog­ ical programs and egotism. By doing so, he created a beauti­ fully interwoven, expansive body of work. This book is the last in the Copper Canyon Press late and posthumous Neruda series, carrying between its covers the knowledge that the quest continues: wha!__~-~~-~~~!-~!:~--L~ forgotten, so it can be le;uned again.
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